BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
I. Field of the Invention
[0001] The present invention relates to wireless communication systems. More particularly,
the present invention relates to a novel and improved method and system for providing
personal base station communications within the coverage area of a cellular base station.
II. Description of the Related Art
[0002] As wireless communication systems become more prevalent in society, the demands for
greater and more sophisticated service have grown. To meet the capacity needs of wireless
communication systems, techniques of multiple access to a limited communication resource
have been developed. The use of code-division multiple access (CDMA) modulation techniques
is one of several techniques for facilitating communications in which a large number
of system users are present. Other multiple access techniques, such as time-division
multiple access (TDMA) and frequency-division multiple access (FDMA) are known in
the art. However, spread-spectrum modulation techniques of CDMA have significant advantages
over these other modulation techniques for multiple access communication systems.
[0003] The use of CDMA techniques in a multiple access communication system is disclosed
in U.S. Patent No. 4,901,307, issued February 13, 1990, entitled "SPREAD SPECTRUM
MULTIPLE ACCESS COMMUNICATION SYSTEM USING SATELLITE OR TERRESTRIAL REPEATERS", assigned
to the assignee of the present invention. The use of CDMA techniques in a multiple
access communication system is further disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 5,103,459, issued
April 7, 1992, entitled "SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR GENERATING SIGNAL WAVEFORMS IN A CDMA
CELLULAR TELEPHONE SYSTEM, assigned to the assignee of the present invention.
[0004] The use of CDMA techniques in a multiple access communication system is also further
disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 5,101,501, issued March 31,1992, entitled "METHOD AND
SYSTEM FOR PROVIDING A SOFT HANDOFF IN COMMUNICATIONS IN A CDMA CELLULAR SYSTEM",
assigned to the assignee of the present invention.
[0005] The teachings of the just mentioned patents have been applied to relatively large
wireless communication systems such as cellular telephone systems that, in turn, interface
with a public switched telephone network (PSTN). In this way, the user of a subscriber
station such as a cellular telephone may generally originate or receive calls from
any other communication device connected to the PSTN as long as the subscriber station
is located within the geographical coverage area of any wireless base station belonging
to the cellular system. The coverage area for these base stations generally extends
several miles. The base stations of these cellular systems are generally referred
to as "macro" base stations, and their respective cell sites as "macro" cell-sites.
[0006] Due to the relatively high cost of cellular telephone service through these macro
base stations as compared to traditional landline telephone service, it is not presently
cost effective to use a cellular telephone for all of one's desired telephone communications.
Thus, users of cellular telephones generally use the cellular telephone only when
a convenient landline connection is not available, such as when they are away from
their home or office. This leads to inconvenience as the user must switch between
phones when entering or leaving his home or office.
[0007] Some prior art wireless telephones have been suggested which operate in a dual-mode
cellular/cordless manner in a common handset. These prior art wireless telephones
provide cellular service to the PSTN through the macro cells of a cellular communication
system, and cordless service to the PSTN through a "micro" base station such as a
standard cordless telephone base unit. The dual-mode cellular/cordless handset automatically
switches between the standard cellular mode of operation and the cordless mode of
operation as the user transitions into the coverage area of the micro base station.
Thus, when the user is away from home, he uses the dual-mode phone in the cellular
mode, and incurs cellular service charges. However, when the user is within the coverage
area of the cordless telephone base unit, typically inside of the home or office,
he uses the dual-mode phone in the cordless mode, avoiding the cellular service charges.
[0008] A problem with the prior art solution is that since the dual-mode telephones typically
must operate on two different frequency bands and use two different communication
protocols and modulation schemes, they must include additional costly components.
For example, they typically include separate transmit and receive paths for the cellular
and the cordless signals, complex switches and special control circuits. These additional
components add cost, size and weight to the prior art dual-mode telephones.
[0009] What is needed is a communication system that simultaneously provides cellular service
and local wireless service without increasing tine cost or complexity of the subscriber
station.
[0010] Further attention is drawn to the document US-A-5,425,030, which discloses a method
of allowing use of small, low-power communication systems within the coverage area
of larger trunked communication systems. A low-power communication system re-uses
the same communication resources used by the larger trunked system whenever sufficient
distance exists between large system communication units and the low power system
so as to avoid interference. Large system communication units may also be constructed
to operate in a dual mode format so as to transmit and receive in a low power mode
and on re-used resources, whenever near a low power system or to transmit and receive
in a high power mode whenever else necessary.
[0011] Attention is also drawn to the document WO 97/08854, which discloses an apparatus
for time division duplex (TDD) repeating a spread spectrum signal, said spread spectrum
signal comprised of a series of code symbol modulated with a pseudonoise sequence.
The TDD repeater receives intermittently the spread spectrum signal at a location
remote from a source supplying the spread spectrum signal. The TDD repeater amplifies
and delays the received spread spectrum signals by a predetermined amount. The TDD
repeater transmits intermittently the delayed amplified received spread spectrum signal
such that the TDD is not receiving the spread spectrum signal when it is transmitting
the signal energy.
[0012] Attention is also drawn to the document DE 43 19 694 A, which discloses a cellular
mobile radio system, in which at least a first fixed station with at least one area
is arranged in each cell and covers at least the range of this cell with radio frequencies
of a general group. There is at least one second fixed station and a range of the
cell which covers at least a part of the cell with radio frequencies of the same channel
group as that of the first fixed station, and the carrier frequency of the channels
of the channel group of the second fixed station differ by a given frequency shift
from the carrier frequencies of the channels of the channel group of the first fixed
station. It is possible for a second additional fixed station to be arranged in the
region of the cell and cover at least one part of the cell with the radio frequencies
of the same channel group as those of the first fixed station. The transmission of
this first fixed station is phase shifted against that of the first fixed station
in order to attain such a time that the two signals reach the receiver of the mobile
station within a time slot which is solved and used by an equalizer in a mobile station.
[0013] Finally, attention is drawn to the document US-A-5,218,717, which discloses in a
simulcast transmission system, a plurality of simulcast transmitters, which are spatially
distributed throughout a broadcasting area, broadcast substantially at the same carrier
frequency and are synchronously modulated with a wanted simulcast signal, wherein
at least two of the simultaneously cast transmitters are simultaneously modulated
with at least one further auxiliary signal with a type of modulation which is different
from that wanted signal, and at least one of the receiver comprises means for separately
evaluating the different wanted signal and auxiliary signal modulations.
[0014] However, all of the above cited prior art references fail to disclose a simple system
and method for operating a macro wireless based station on the same frequency band
as a micro wireless based station in the same cell of a cellular communication system,
as set forth in claims 1 and 16. Embodiments of the present invention are claimed
in the dependent claims.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0015] The present invention is a novel and improved method and system for providing personal
base station communications within the "cell" of a cellular base station. As defined
and used herein the term "cell" will refer to a geographical coverage area whereas
the term "cell-site" will be used to refer to the physical equipment used to perform
communications, i.e. one or more base stations. The present invention provides a method
and system for operation of a personal base station where the forward link (base station
to subscriber station) of a personal base station is on the same frequency assignment
as the forward link of a macro base station belonging to a cellular communication
system. By operating the personal base station on the same frequency assignment as
the macro base station, an operator is not required to use additional spectrum in
order to support the micro base station. Since an operator has a fixed amount of spectrum
allocated to it, and if the operator was using all of its existing spectra, the operator
would have to undergo a great expense to add more cells to free up a frequency. Other
alternatives such as obtaining more spectrum are generally not available to an operator.
Although the present invention is disclosed herein with reference to a CDMA system,
it is understood that the teachings are equally applicable to other wireless communication
schemes, whether digital or analog, and regardless of the modulation scheme employed.
[0016] In the present invention, a first wireless base station is operated on the same frequency
band as a second wireless base station. The first wireless base station, a "macro"
base station, generates and transmits a first forward link data signal and communicates
with a first subscriber station. A second wireless base station, a "micro" base station,
generates a second forward link data signal and communicates with a second subscriber
station. The second wireless base station receives the first forward link data signal
and combines it with its own second forward link data signal to form a combined forward
link data signal, the second wireless base station then transmits the combined forward
link data signal. Thus, the first subscriber station, which is in communication with
the macro base station, is able to receive and diversity combine the macro base station
forward link data from the combined forward link data signal transmitted by the micro
base station, improving the signal to noise ratio that would otherwise occur in the
vicinity of the micro base station.
[0017] In a first embodiment of the present invention, the micro base station combines the
first forward link signal with its own outgoing second forward link signal at radio
frequency (RF). In a second embodiment of the present invention, the micro base station
combines the first forward link signal with its own outgoing second forward link signal
at an intermediate frequency (IF).
[0018] The present invention also delays the received first forward link data signal for
a predetermined delay period prior to combining it with the second forward link data
signal, so that it appears to the first subscriber station as a resolvable multipath
signal. In order to avoid self-interference, the second wireless base station switches
between receiving the first forward link data signal and transmitting the combined
forward link data signal at a predetermined switching period. In the preferred embodiment,
the predetermined switching period results in approximately a 50% transmit duty cycle.
Thus, the micro base station does not transmit substantially continuously, but rather
switches roughly on the "half-interval" of a predetermined time interval between transmitting
a combined signal, and receiving the first forward link signal from the macro base
station.
[0019] In another aspect of the present invention, a power measurer in the micro base station
measures a power level of the delayed received first forward link data signal and
a gain adjuster adjusts the power level of the delayed received first forward link
data signal in response to the power level measurement in order to scale the first
forward link data signal with respect to the second forward link data signal. In the
preferred embodiment, the scaling factor is determined in accordance with the received
power of the first forward link signal as measured by the power measurer. This scaling
is performed in order to ensure sufficient energy of the retransmitted macro base
station forward link data at the first subscriber station without unduly degrading
the signal to noise ratio of the micro base station's own forward link data at the
second subscriber station.
[0020] In accordance with another aspect of the present invention, unacceptable interference
from the second subscriber station, which is communicating with the micro base station,
is avoided by the micro base station either terminating communication with second
subscriber station or executing a handoff of the second subscriber station to the
macro base station when the transmit power of the second subscriber station exceeds
a predetermined threshold. In this regard, a power control command generator in the
micro base station generates power control commands, each of the power control commands
indicating an increase or decrease in transmit power. A transmitter in tine micro
base station transmits these power control commands to the second subscriber station.
To avoid excessive interference, the micro base station terminates communication with
the second subscriber station if the micro base station transmits a predetermined
number of consecutive power control commands indicating an increase in transmit power.
In an alternative embodiment, the base station informs the second subscriber station
of the maximum power that tine second subscriber station using the micro base station
is allowed to transmit. The second subscriber station is not allowed to exceed this
power while communicating with the micro base station. When the second subscriber
station using the micro base station reaches this limit, the micro base station will
continually send power control commands to have the second subscriber station increase
its output power; however, the second subscriber station does not increase its transmit
power. The micro base station can then sense that the second subscriber station is
at the edge of coverage and release the call. The micro base station can set the maximum
amount of power that the second subscriber station is allowed to transmit by monitoring
the amount of power which is received from the macro base station.
[0021] In accordance with another aspect of tine present invention the macro base station
typically includes means for maintaining extremely accurate time and frequency reference.
This is generally accomplished by means of a (Global Positioning System (GPS) satellite
receiver or other expensive equipment. However, it may be prohibitively expensive
to provide such precision equipment at the micro base station. Thus, in the present
invention, the micro base station obtains the accurate time and frequency reference
from the macro base station. In this regard, the micro base station includes a demodulator
which demodulates the received first forward link data signal, and the time reference
determining means for determining a time reference from the demodulated received first
forward link data signal. Furthermore, the micro base station includes frequency reference
determining means for determining a frequency reference from the demodulated received
first forward link data signal.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0022] The features, objects, and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent
from the detailed description set forth below when taken in conjunction with the drawings
in which like reference characters identify correspondingly throughout and wherein:
FIG. 1 is a graph of received power as a function of distance from a macro base station
and a micro base station of the present invention;
FIG. 2 is an overview block diagram of the system of the present invention;
FIG. 3 is a block diagram of a first embodiment of the micro base station of the present
invention;
FIG. 4 is a block diagram of a second embodiment of the micro base station of the
present invention;
FIG. 5A is a graph of an exemplary portion of the macro base station forward link
as transmitted over an arbitrary time interval;
FIG. 5B is a is a graph of an exemplary portion of the micro base station combined
forward link as transmitted over the satne arbitrary time interval as FIG. 5A; and
FIG. 6 is a block diagram of an exemplary encoding and modulating apparatus of the
macro base station.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0023] In a CDMA cellular system, such as that described by Telecommunications Industry
Association (TIA)/Electronics Industries Association (EIA) Interim Standard IS-95,
entitled "Mobile Station - Base Station Compatibility Standard for Dual-Mode Wideband
Spread Spectrum Cellular System", the forward link (base station to mobile station)
operates in a 1.25 MHz frequency channel, for example, according to IS-95, the forward
link of a base station may operate on a particular 1.25 MHz CDMA channel assigned
from among a plurality 1.25 MHz-wide CDMA channels located in the 869.70 MHz to 893.31
MHz range.
[0024] A single CDMA base station may transmit different information signals to each of
its multiple subscriber stations over the same 1.25 MHz frequency channel. The CDMA
base station may modulate each respective information signal with a different pseudo-noise
(PN) code which spreads the information signal in frequency. A particular subscriber
station is then able to discriminate the information signal of interest to it by correlating
the received signal with the same PN code that was used by the base station to modulate
that signal, thereby despreading only tine desired information signal. The remainder
of the information signals, whose codes do not match, are not despread in bandwidth.
As a result, these other information signals contribute to noise at the subscriber
station receiver and represent a self-interference generated by the CDMA system. For
similar reasons, signals from neighboring base stations also contribute to the noise
at the subscriber station receiver.
[0025] As long as the ratio of the energy per bit (E
b) Of the desired information signal to the noise power spectral density (N
0) of the operating environment is sufficiently large, the desired information signal
may be successfully demodulated. However, when the E
b/N
0 of the desired information signal is low, such as in the presence of significant
interference from other base stations, error rates become unacceptably high. For these
reasons, as a subscriber station moves from the coverage area of a first base station
into tine coverage area of a second base station, it will generally execute a "handoff"
from the first base station to the second base station when signals from the second
base station exceed a predetermined threshold. These general principles are described
in more detail in the above-mentioned patents. The same general principles of acceptable
signal to noise ratio apply to other wireless communication systems as well.
[0026] This presents a significant problem if a personal base station is operated on the
same assigned 1.25 MHz frequency channel as a neighboring macro base station. The
problem is illustrated by FIG. 1. Line 102 represents time power received at a subscriber
station from a macro base station as a function of the distance from the macro base
station. Line 104 represents tine power received at the subscriber station from the
personal base station, which will also be referred to herein as a "micro" base station,
as a function of distance from the micro base station. Thus, as a subscriber station
which is communicating within the macro base station moves away from the macro base
station, and toward the micro base station, the relative power received from the micro
base station increases. In order to be inexpensive, a personal base station is relatively
small and does not have the resources to accept a handoff from a neighboring macro
base station, even if it were desirable to do so. Furthermore, if the micro base station
had the resources to accept handoffs, it may not be desirable to operate the micro
base station in a manner in which it accepts all handoffs or calls from the macro
base station. Thus, at some distance, designated "D", the power received from the
micro base station, which represents interference to the subscriber station communicating
with the macro base station, becomes large enough to cause unacceptably high demodulation
error rates.
[0027] An example of the dilemma illustrated in FIG. 1 is when a mobile telephone user,
communicating with a macro base station via a mobile telephone in his car, drives
by a house that has a personal base station operating its forward link on the same
frequency assignment as the forward link of the macro base station. Since the personal
base station belongs to the homeowner, it is generally programmed to accept call originations
or handoffs from "home" subscriber stations only (i.e. those that are associated with
the micro base station), and not from "foreign" subscriber stations (i.e., those that
are not associated with the micro base station). This may be accomplished, for example,
by the micro base station recognizing the identity of the mobile station, such as
the IMSI or ESN, which is allowed to make an origination or perform a handoff. This
can be verified in order to prevent fraud by the use of an authentication key or Personal
Identification Number (PIN) shared by the "home" subscriber station and the micro
base station. The micro base station may also be informed by the network of authorized
mobile stations and the micro base station may recognize these mobiles via their IMSI
or ESN. Thus, as the mobile telephone user approaches the house, the interference
from the personal base station would become, unacceptably high in the absence of the
present invention.
I. Micro Base Station Repeater
[0028] The present invention provides a method and apparatus for operation of a personal
base station where the forward link of the personal base station is on the same frequency
channel as the forward link of a macro base station belonging to a neighboring wireless
communication system. The solution is for the personal base station to "listen" for
a portion of the time to what the macro base station is transmitting on its forward
link to the subscriber station. The micro base station then combines the macro base
station forward link data with its own outgoing forward link data. The two signals
may be scaled relative to each other and combined so that a passing subscriber station
could demodulate its desired information signal, which originated at the macro base
station, from the combined signal transmitted by, the micro base station. An overview
of the system 200 of the present invention is illustrated in FIG. 2.
[0029] In FIG. 2, a mobile station 222 is shown in communication with macro base station
204. Thus, the desired information signal for mobile station 222, as part of the macro
base station forward link data, is transmitted by transceiver (XCVR) 218 over macro
base station antenna 216 and forward link path 226. Mobile station 222 receives the
macro base station forward link data via antenna 220. Mobile station 222 also transmits
a reverse link signal via antenna 220 and over reverse link path 228 which is captured
by macro base station antenna 216 and received by XCVR 218. Thus, mobile station 222
would generally correspond to the "foreign" subscriber station which is not associated
with the micro base station 202.
[0030] Also shown in FIG. 2 is a portable station 236 in communication with micro base station
202. The forward link signal transmitted by micro base station 202 is received by
the portable station 236 over forward link path 232. Portable station 236 also transmits
a reverse link signal over reverse link path 234 which is received by micro base station
202. Thus, portable station 236 would generally correspond to the "home" subscriber
station which is associated with the micro base station. Portable station 236 may
also be able to receive some signal from macro base station 204 on the forward link.
However, this invention assumes that the mobile station is not in soft handoff with
the macro base station. Thus, the macro base station 204 may be providing some interference
to portable station 236 and portable station 236 may not be obtaining signals with
desired user information from macro base station 204. Similarly, macro base station
204 may be receiving some signal from portable station 236; however, it is not processing
the reverse link from portable station 236 and, thus, the receiver signal is interference.
[0031] It should be noted that both mobile station 222 and portable station 236 could be
any type of wireless subscriber station, whether mobile, portable, or otherwise. However,
for purposes of illustration clarity and simplicity, they will be referred to herein
as a mobile station 222 and a portable station 236.
[0032] Micro base station 202 also receives the forward link data signal transmitted by
macro base station 204 over forward link path 224. The signal is captured by micro
base station antenna 206 and routed by duplexer 208 to combiner 214. Combiner 214
combines the forward link data signal transmitted by macro base station 204 with the
micro base station's own forward link data. The resultant combined forward link data
signal is then transmitted through duplexer 208 and antenna 206. The mobile station
222 receives the combined forward link data signal over forward link path 230. Thus,
mobile station 222 is able to receive and diversity combine the macro base station
forward link data over both forward link path 226 and forward link path 230, improving
the signal to noise ratio that would otherwise occur in the vicinity of the micro
base station 202. The same combined forward link data signal is also received by portable
station 236 over forward link path 232.
[0033] The duplexer 208 may also serve another function of separating the portable station
236 transmit frequency from the micro base station 202 transmit frequency. The signal
which has been received from the portable station 236 is then fed to a receiver and
demodulator which are not shown in FIG. 2. The receiver and demodulator are similar
in form to those used in the macro base station 204. However, the micro base station
202 is typically designed to handle only a single call or a few calls, thus the receiver
and demodulator of micro base station 202 can be much simpler in design than the receiver
and demodulator in the macro base station 204.
[0034] In a first embodiment of the present invention, the micro base station 202 combines
the macro base station forward link signal with its own outgoing forward link signal
at radio frequency (RF). FIG. 3 illustrates this first embodiment of the present invention.
The macro base station forward link signal is received by micro base station 202 over
forward link patla 224. Antenna 206 passes this received forward link signal through
duplexer 208 to delay element 304. Delay element 304 introduces a predetermined time
delay, which will be discussed in detail below, into the received forward link signal.
The delayed forward link signal is passed to scaling element 320 which scales the
delayed forward link signal according to the scaling factor, g, generated by gain
adjust element 312. Scaling element 320 may contain attenuators, amplifiers, or both
in order to adjust the level of the signal from macro base station 204 to the correct
level. The construction of these elements are well know in the art.
[0035] In the preferred embodiment, duplexer 208 is a switch as is shown in Figures 3 and
4. As indicated above, it may be combined with a more conventional duplexer to allow
for antenna 206 to be used for receiving the transmissions of portable station 236.
In this use, duplexer 208 separates the received transmissions from portable station
236 and feeds them to receiver 324. This is not shown in the Figures as this is welt
known in the art.
[0036] In the preferred embodiment, the scaling factor, g, is determined in accordance with
the received power of the forward link signal as measured by power measurer 310, as
well as the gain of the micro base station forward link signal as transmitted by transmitter
(XMTR) 314. The scaling factor, g, provides a means of scaling the received macro
base station forward link signal with respect to the micro base station forward link
data signal, which has been upconverted and amplified by XMTR 314. This scaling is
performed in order to ensure sufficient E
b/N
0 of the retransmitted macro base station forward link data at mobile station 222 without
unduly degrading the E
b/N
0 of the micro base station's own forward link data at the micro base station user's
portable station 236. The scaled macro base station forward link signal is combined
in combiner 322 with the micro base station forward link signal generated by XMTR
314. The resultant combined forward link signal is provided through duplexer 208 to
antenna 206 where it is radiated over forward link paths 230 and 232.
[0037] In a second embodiment of the present invention, the micro base station 202 combines
the macro base station forward link signal with its own outgoing forward link signal
at an intermediate frequency (IF). FIG. 4 illustrates this second embodiment of the
present invention. In this second embodiment, the macro base station forward link
signal is received by micro base station 202 over forward link path 224. Antenna 206
passes this received forward link signal through duplexer 208 to receiver 403 where
the signal is downconverted to IF. The IF macro base station forward link signal is
then passed to delay element 304 which introduces a predetermined time delay into
the IF macro base station forward link signal. The delayed IF macro base station forward
link signal is passed to scaling element 320 which scales the delayed forward link
signal according to the scaling factor, g, generated by gain adjust element 312. In
the preferred embodiment, the scaling factor, g, is determined in accordance with
the received power of the forward link signal as measured by power measurer 310, as
well as the gain of the IF micro base station forward link signal as amplified by
pre-amplifier 415. The scaling factor, g, provides a means of scaling the IF macro
base station forward link signal with respect to the IF micro base station forward
link data signal which has amplified by pre-amplifier 415. The scaled IF macro base
station forward link signal is combined in combiner 322 with the IF micro base station
forward link signal. The resultant combined forward link signal is provided to transmitter
414 where it is upconverted, amplified, and transmitted through duplexer 208 over
antenna 206 where it is radiated over forward link paths 230 and 232.
[0038] As a result, the transmit power of the forward link of macro base station 204 follows
the curve 106 in FIG 1. Specifically, the effective power density (or power received
by the mobile station 222) of the forward link of macro base station 204 follows curve
106 which is very close to that radiated by the macro base station 204 only (curve
102) until the mobile station 222 gets close to the micro base station 202. At that
point, mobile station 222 is able to receive both the micro base station 202 and the
macro base station 204, the result of which is somewhat above curve 102. If the mobile
station 222 is very close to the micro base station 202, then the power is essentially
that of the micro base station 202 only and follows curve 104.
[0039] Since the forward link of the macro base station 204 is on the same frequency assignment
as the forward link of the micro base station 202, it is critical to the present invention
that the micro base station 202 is not "listening" to the macro base station 204 while
the micro base station 202 itself is transmitting. Clearly, this would cause tinacceptable
self-interference. Thus, the present invention provides a timing scheme which avoids
this self-interference.
[0040] FIGS. 5A and 5B illustrate the timing scheme of the present invention. FIG. 5A is
a graph of the macro base station forward link energy over a time period. In the exemplary
illustration, the macro base station forward link has been illustrated over time interval
T
0-T
5. The data in time interval T
0-T
5 is represented in FIG. 5A as C
1 through C
3, respectively. As can be seen from FIG. 5A, the macro base station may transmit data
continuously over the time interval T
0-T
5, as would be typically done in a system complying to the IS-95 standard. Thus, FIG.
5A represents a generic example of the macro base, station forward link signal over
time that would be observed on forward link path 224 of FIGS. 2, 3 and 4.
[0041] FIG. 5B is a graph of the micro base station forward link energy over the same time
intervals as FIG. 5A. The shaded portions of the time intervals indicate times when
the micro base station 202 is not transmitting, but rather is "listening" to the macro
base station forward link signal as represented by FIG. 5A. The non-shaded portions
represent times when the micro base station 202 is transmitting the combined signal
comprising the micro base station forward link data and the macro base station forward
link data. As can be seen from FIG. 5B, the micro base station 202 does not transmit
substantially continuously over the time interval T
0-T
5, but rather switches roughly on the "half-interval" of each time interval between
transmitting a combined signal, and receiving the macro base station forward link
signal. In the preferred embodiment, a brief guard period, during which the micro
base station is neither transmitting a combined signal nor receiving the macro base
station forward link signal, is also provided. This guard period is represented in
FIG. 5B by the brief blank periods between successive shaded and non-shaded blocks.
Thus, FIG. 5B represents a generic example of the micro base station combined forward
link signal over time that would be observed on forward link paths 230 and 232 of
FIGS. 2,3 and 4.
[0042] In the preferred embodiment, the timing scheme of FIG. 5B is accomplished by delay
element 304, and switching means of duplexer 208. Alternatively, receiver 324 (FIG.
3) or 403 (FIG. 4), and transmitter 314 (FIG.3) or 414 (FIG. 4), respectively, may
implement the switching means by alternatively masking the transmit and receive signals.
In the preferred embodiment, during the time represented by the shaded periods of
FIG. 5B, duplexer 208 routes the incoming macro base station forward link signal to
delay element 304 and receiver 324 (FIG. 3) or 403 (FIG. 4). Thus, the micro base
station "listens" to the first half of each macro base station forward link data interval
C
1-C
5 of FIG. 5A. As previously mentioned, delay element 304 introduces a predetermined
time delay into tine received macro base station forward link signal. This predetermined
time delay is equal to the switching period, i.e. one half-interval. During the time
periods represented by the non-shaded portions of FIG. 5B duplexer 208 routes the
outgoing combined forward link signal to antenna 206 for radiation over forward link
paths 230 and 232. Thus, the combined signal transmitted by the micro base station,
as represented by the non-shaded portions of FIG. 5B, includes the macro base station
forward link data from the immediately preceding half-interval.
[0043] Since the micro base station 202 cannot "listen" to the macro base station 204 forward
link when the micro base station 202 itself is transmitting, the micro base station
202 will essentially "miss" half of the data transmitted on the macro base station
204 forward link. That is to say that it will not be able to delay and retransmit
the second half of each macro base station 204 forward link data interval C
1-C
5. Thus, the period of the switching interval is preferably chosen such that the "missed"
data has a minimal effect on the ability of mobile station 222 or portable station
236 to demodulate and decode the combined forward link signal. The determination of
an acceptable switching period is very dependent on the design of the forward link
used by macro base station 204 and micro base station 202 on their respective forward
links.
[0044] An exemplary forward link encoding and modulation scheme for a forward traffic channel
of macro base station 204 or micro base station 202 is illustrated in FIG. 6 and is
based upon IS-95. It should be noted that other communication channels, such as pilot
and synchronization channels, may be encoded and modulated in a similar manner. However,
for clarity and simplicity, the operation of a traffic channel will be discussed herein.
[0045] In FIG. 6, forward link information data which has being multiplexed into frames
is presented to convolution encoder 602. In the exemplary embodiment, the convolution
code is rate 1/2, thereby generating two code symbols for each data bit input to the
encoder 602. Also, in the exemplary embodiment, the encoder 602 has a constraint length
of nine. Convolution encoding, as is known in the art, involves the modulo-two addition
of selected taps of the serially time-delayed input data sequence. The length of the
data sequence delay is equal to K-1, where K is the constraint length. Thus, the output
of convolutional encoder 602 is twice the rate of the input, with each of the resulting
convolutionally encoded modulation symbols being dependent on other adjacent modulation
symbols according to the constraint length. Clearly, other code rates and constraint
lengths could be used.
[0046] The output of convolutional encoder 602 is presented to symbol repeater 604. In the
exemplary embodiment, symbol repeater 604 repeats each convolutionally encoded modulation
symbol in accordance with the information data rate, resulting in an output having
a constant modulation symbol rate. For example, if the information data rate is at
a highest rate of 9600 bps, there is no symbol repetition. At an information data
rate of one-half the highest rate, or 4800 bps, each code symbol is repeated one time
(each symbol occurs two consecutive times). At an information data rate of one-quarter
of the highest rate, or 2400 bps, each code symbol is repeated three times. And at
an information data rate of one-eighth the highest rate, or 1200 bps, each code symbol
is repeated seven times. As can be seen, this example would result in a constant modulation
symbol rate of 19,200 modulation symbols per second being output from symbol repeater
604. Clearly, other rate sets may be employed.
[0047] The output symbols from symbol repeater 604 are presented to block interleaver 606,
which in the exemplary embodiment for a traffic channel, spans 20 ms, which is equivalent
to 384 modulation symbols at the exemplary modulation symbol rate of 19,200 symbols
per second. The interleaver array is 24 rows by 16 columns. The symbols are written
into the array of block interleaver 606 by columns, and read out in a pattern that
greatly disperses adjacent modulation symbols.
[0048] In the exemplary case of a forward traffic channel, the interleaved modulation symbols
read out from block interleaver 606 are input to modulo-two adder 608, where they
are masked by the long code PN sequence assigned to mobile station 222. Long code
generator 614 generates a PN sequence at a rate of 1.2288 Mcps, which is thereafter
downsampled to 19,200 ksps by decimator 616 to match the modulation symbol rate. The
PN sequence is further downsampled by decimator 618 to mask or randomize the locations
of the power control bits that are punctured into the forward traffic channel by multiplexer
(MUX) 610.
[0049] Thereafter, the forward traffic data is orthogonally spread with respect to other
forward channels by an assigned traffic channel Walsh Function having a fixed chip
rate of 1.2288 Mcps in modulo-two adder 612. Then the forward traffic data is quadrature
spread by I-channel and Q channel PN spreading sequences PN
1 and PN
Q, respectively, in modulo-two channel data is filtered in filters 624 and 626 respectively,
and then upconverted, to the carrier frequency, f
C, by mixers 628 and 630. The resulting I and Q channel RF signals are then combined
in combiner 632 and output for further power amplification and radiation over antenna
216 (see FIG. 2). The exemplary encoding and modulation scheme of FIG. 6 is described
in more detail in the above-references U.S. Patent No. 5,103,459.
[0050] The just-described exemplary encoding and modulation scheme is very robust and error
resistant. As a result, the amount of "listening" time may be somewhat less than 50%
duty cycle without significant loss of data. Thus, the switching period used by the
present invention in a communication system employing such a powerful error coding
scheme may be variable over a greater range than that used in a system that has a
narrower bandwidth and thus must use less powerful schemes. For example, in the exemplary
embodiment just described, every information bit has been encoded by a rate 1/2 convolutional
encoder 602. Therefore, every bit has at least two modulation symbols, with the lower
rates having even more redundancy added by symbol repeater 604. Furthermore, the adjacent
modulation symbols are greatly dispersed in time by block interleaver 606. Additionally,
the constraint length of the convolutional encoder 602 and the uniqueness of the code
symbols used both add to the robustness of the encoding scheme. As a result, assuming
sufficient energy of the transmitted signal, the switching period may be on the order
of milliseconds without significant loss of data. Assuming a 20 ms frame, the switching
period may approach 10 ms. Alternatively, the switching period may be less, on the
order of the duration of a single modulation symbol, in which case, every other symbol
would be lost. In still another embodiment, the switching period may be even less,
on the order of the duration of a single PN chip. In yet another embodiment, the switching
period may be randomized. The determination of an acceptable switching period is very
dependent on the design of the forward link used by macro base station 204 and micro
base station 202 on their respective forward links. In the example of a system conforming
to the IS-95 standard, the period T
i+1 - T
i should be long enough so that the delay, is greater than one PN spreading chip (so
that the multipath created by micro base station 202 is separated by at least one
chip) and so that the transmitted spectrum is that of the original IS-95 signal. However,
the period T
i+1 - T
i should not be so long so that tile mobile station 222 is not able to track the phase
and timing of the base stations. A further consideration occurs with IS-95 systems
with orthogonal forward links separated by Walsh functions. When the mobile station
receives only a part of a Walsh function, then the orthogonality is somewhat lost
and the required signal to noise ratio increases due to the coupling between the forward
link Walsh channels. To maintain orthogonality, switching could be done every Walsh
function or exact multiple of a time span of a Walsh function. To be even more specific
in the context of an IS-95 system, the power control bit locations are randomized
and are multiplexed into the data stream as shown in FIG. 6. These power control bits
occupy one or two Walsh functions in every 1.25 ms on the forward link. For the IS-95
system, one could randomize the time of switching so that the mobile station 222 receiving
the macro base station 204 receives all of the power control bits. The exact switching
duration and the exact switching time that is chosen depends upon these items, plus
others such as the complexity of delay 304.
[0051] It should be noted that the mobile station 222 (see FIG. 2) which is communicating
with the macro base station 204 continues to transmit reverse link data to macro base
station 204 over reverse link path 228. Even though mobile station 222 is receiving
the combined forward link signal from micro base station 202 over micro base station
forward link path 230, micro base station 202 does not demodulate the signal from
mobile station 222 even though the signal from mobile station 222 could be strong
enough to demodulate. In other words, mobile station 222 does not execute a handoff
to micro base station 202 even though the pilot signal strength of micro base station
202 may exceed the nominal threshold for handoff, as discussed in the above-referenced
U.S. Patent No. 5,101,501.
[0052] The combined forward link signal received from micro base station 202 over forward
link path 230 appears to mobile station 222 to be very similar to any other multipath
component originating at macro base station 204, except that the signal will be "chopped"
on the half interval. Thus, the mobile station 222, which in the preferred embodiment
is capable of diversity combining of multipath signals, will be aided sufficiently
by the additional energy provided forward link path 230 to avoid unacceptably high
demodulation error rates. Furthermore, since the micro base station 202 retransmits
whatever it receives on the particular frequency assignment, i.e. the entire macro
base station forward link, addition of more "foreign" mobile units 222 does not increase
the load on the micro base station 202.
[0053] In many cases, the micro base station 202 will be within the coverage area of one
macro base station 204. In this case, it is retransmitting only the forward link of
that one macro base station 204. However, as is disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 5,101,501,
issued March 31, 1992, entitled "METHOD AND SYSTEM FOR PROVIDING A SOFT HANDOFF IN
COMMUNICATIONS IN A CDMA CELLULAR SYSTEM", all CDMA base stations transmit on the
same frequency and soft handoff can be used by mobile stations. In this case, the
micro base station 202 will re-transmit the signals of those base stations which it
is receiving, with a power proportional to the strength which they are being received
by the 15 micro base station 202.
II. Time and Frequency Reference
[0054] In accordance with another aspect of the present invention the micro base station
202 demodulates at least one logical channel of the macro base station 204 forward
link signal in order to obtain a stable time and frequency reference. As previously
explained, the macro base station 204 typically includes means for maintaining extremely
accurate time and frequency reference. This is generally accomplished by means of
a Global Positioning System (GPS) satellite receiver (not shown) or other expensive
equipment. However, it may be prohibitively expensive to provide such precision equipment
at the micro base station 202. Thus, in the present invention, the micro base station
202 obtains the accurate time and frequency reference from macro base station 204.
[0055] Referring back to FIG. 3, antenna 206 captures the macro base station forward link
signal from forward link path 224, and routes it to receiver (RCVR) 324 via duplexer
208. Receiver 324 downconverts the RF signal, and passes it to demodulator (DEMOD)
326. Demodulator 326 searches for, acquires, and demodulates the pilot channel which
is transmitted as part of the macro base station forward link signal. In the exemplary
CDMA system, this pilot signal may be used to obtain initial system synchronization
and to provide robust time frequency and phase tracking of the macro base station
forward link signal. Also, in the exemplary CDMA system, each base station transmits
a synchronization channel which uses the same PN sequence and PN phase as tile pilot
channel and can be demodulated whenever the pilot channel is being tracked. This sync
channel carries a message containing macro base station 204 identification and the
exact macro base station 204 pilot PN carrier phase offset.
[0056] This synchronization information is passed from demodulator 326 to time and frequency
unit (TFU) 330. TFU 330 is then able to determine exact System Time and obtain a stable
frequency reference from the macro base station 204. TFU 330 then provides this timing
and frequency information to transmitter 314 and receiver 324, and provides timing
information to duplexer 208 if duplexer 208 is performing the switching function.
In the context of the IS-95 system, the micro base station 202 may not need to demodulate
the sync channel of the macro base station 204 to obtain macro base station identification
and pilot PN carrier phase offset. This is because micro base station 202 doesn't
move and this information is static. Thus, this information can be supplied to micro
base station 202 by other means such as by the installer of the micro base station
202.
[0057] The same teachings are applicable to the embodiment of FIG. 4 with respect to receiver
403 and transmitter 414. Micro base station 202 may then track the macro base station
pilot channel continuously, or it may "freewheel" for a predetermined time period,
and obtain System Time and frequency reference updates only periodically.
[0058] It should be noted that although the time and frequency referencing aspect of the
present invention has been described herein with reference to an exemplary CDMA system,
the teachings of the present invention are equally applicable to other communication
systems, whether digital or analog, and 25 regardless of the modulation or channelization
scheme employed. For example, the present invention may also be used in a communication
system where the macro base station pilot channel itself carries a System Time reference.
Additionally, the pilot channel may not be on the same carrier frequency or time slot
as any of the other forward link channels. The present invention is not intended to
be limited to the specific examples shown herein, and one of ordinary skill in the
art may apply its teachings to a wide variety of communication systems.
III. Micro Base Station Power Control
[0059] In accordance with another aspect of the present invention, the micro base station
202 controls the reverse link power level of portable station 236 to avoid excessive
interference with the reverse link signals of other subscriber stations, such as mobile
station 222, that are received at macro base station 204. As is known in the art,
wireless communication system 200 may use a combination of open loop and closed loop
power control methods to maximize capacity and prevent excessive interference among
subscriber stations. In open loop power control methods, the pilot signal transmitted
power is measured as received at the subscriber station. The subscriber station then
adjusts its transmit power inversely in response; the weaker the received signal,
the stronger the subscriber station's transmitter power. In closed loop power control
methods, the cell-site transmits power adjustment commands to the subscriber station
to nominally increase or decrease the subscriber station transmitter power by a predetermined
amount. Such a power control system and method is disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 5,056,109,
issued October 8, 1991, entitled "METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR CONTROLLING TRANSMISSION
POWER IN A CDMA CELLULAR MOBILE TELEPHONE SYSTEM," assigned to the assignee of the
present invention and incorporated herein by reference.
[0060] In the just-mentioned patent, the combination of open and closed loop power control
is used to adjust the transmit power of all mobile stations 222 that are in communication
with macro base station 204 so as to arrive at the macro base station 204 at substantially
the same predetermined power level. The same power control techniques may be used
to control the transmit power of all portable stations 236 that are communicating
with micro base station 202 so as to arrive at micro base station 202 at substantially
the same predetermined power level. However, since portable station 236 will typically
not be in communication with macro base station 204 as long as it has satisfactory
communications with micro base station 202 (to avoid cellular system access charges),
macro base station 204 is not able to use closed loop power control commands to instruct
portable station 236 to "turn down" its transmitter power. As is shown in FIG 2, the
received power from the micro base station 202 gets weaker as the portable station
236 moves further away from micro base station 202. As a result of both open and closed
loop power control, portable station 236 communicating with micro cell 202 will transmit
enough power to be received by micro cell 202. As a consequence, as portable station
236 moves farther away from micro base station 202, it would continue to increase
its power to a level which could cause unacceptable interference on reverse link path
228.
[0061] In the present invention, this unacceptable interference is avoided by the micro
base station 202 either terminating communication with portable station 236 or executing
a handoff of portable station 236 to macro base station 204 when the transmit power
of portable station 236 exceeds a predetermined threshold. In a first embodiment,
the micro base station 202 itself determines when the transmit power of portable station
236 may be too high.
[0062] In this first embodiment, applicable to either FIG. 3 or 4, the reverse link signal
from portable station 236 is received by antenna 206 and passed to receiver 324 (FIG.
3) or receiver 403 (FIG. 4). Receiver 324 or 403 downconverts tilt, received reverse
link signal as previously discussed, and passes it to demodulator 326. Power control
command generator 332 measures the average power of the demodulated reverse link signal
from portable station 236, compares that average power with a desired threshold, and
generates either a "turn up" or "turn down" command for transmission to portable station
236 through transmitter 314 (FIG. 3) or 414 (FIG. 4) in the manner discussed in the
above-referenced U.S. Patent No. 5,056,109.
[0063] Intuitively, as portable station 236 travels away from micro base station the average
reverse link signal power as measured by power control command generator 332 will
tend to decrease due to path loss. In response, power control command generator 332
will transmit a series of "turn up" commands to portable station 236. In this first
embodiment, power control command generator 332 keeps track of how frequently it is
required to transmit a "turn up" command to portable station 236. If it transmits
more than a predetermined number of "turn up" commands in a sequence of power control
commands, corresponding to the condition where portable station 236 is having to transmit
at a relatively high power level in order to provide a sufficient reverse link signal
over reverse link path 234, micro base station 202 will either terminate communication
with portable station 236, or execute a handoff of portable station 236 to macro base
station 204. For example, if the micro base station transmitted K power up commands
in a group of N power control commands, then the micro base station may determine
that the personal station has exceeded the desired range.
[0064] In a second embodiment, the transmit power of portable station 236 is limited to
a predetermined maximum level when communicating with micro base station 202. This
can be accomplished by some prefixed rules in the programming of portable station
236 so that when the portable station is using the micro base station 202, its transmit
power is limited to the predetermined maximum level. It should be noted that the portable
station 236 would not perform such limiting when communicating with the macro base
station 204.
This power limitation can be readily accomplished by one skilled in the art, for example,
by modifying the teachings of the above-referenced U.S. Patent No. 5,056,109 to provide
for the portable station 236 to ignore "turn up" commands once its transmit power
has exceeded the predetermined maximum level while it is communicating with micro
base station 202. A circuit designed to ignore "turn up" commands after the portable
station 236 transmit power exceeds a predetermined threshold is disclosed in U.S.
Patent No. 5,452,473, entitled "REVERSE LINK, TRANSMIT POWER CORRECTION AND LIMITATION
IN A RADIOTELEPHONE SYSTEM," issued September 19, 1995, assigned to the assignee of
the present invention and incorporated herein by reference. In this embodiment, the
micro base station 202 will be able to sense that the portable station 236 is at the
edge of the cell coverage by noting that the portable station 236 has not complied
with a series of "turn up" commands. The micro base station 202 may then release the
call. However, a conventional maximum power level would be used by the portable station
236 when communicating with macro base station 204.
[0065] Power limitation of portable station 236 can also be accomplished by a command from
micro base station 202 which indicates to the portable station 236 to limit its transmit
power to a maximum level. Micro base station 202 may determine this maximum level
by monitoring (with power measurer 310 of FIGS. 3 and 4) the amount of power received
from macro base station 204. The higher the received power from macro base station
204, the higher the allowed maximum transmit power of portable station 236 may be
without causing undue interference to other mobile stations operating within the macro
base, station's 204 cell.
[0066] Alternatively, portable station 236 can signal micro base station 202 with a signaling
message indicating that it has reached its power limit or a power threshold. Along
with this signaling message, portable station 236 may indicate the pilot strengths
of surrounding base stations, as is done with the existing IS-95 Pilot Strength Measurement
Message and described in further detail in the above-referenced U.S. Patent No. 5,101,501.
This permits micro base station 202 to determine whether to hand portable station
236 off to macro base station 204.
[0067] The previous description of the preferred embodiments is provided to enable any person
skilled in the art to make or use the present invention. The various modifications
to these embodiments will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art, and the
generic principles defined herein may be applied to other embodiments without the
use of the inventive faculty. The present invention is not intended to be limited
to the embodiments shown herein but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent
with the appended claims.
1. A method for operating a macro wireless base station (204) on a same frequency band
as a micro wireless base station (202) in the same cell of a cellular communication
system, said macro wireless base station (204) generating and transmitting a first
forward link data signal (224, 226) and communicating with a first subscriber station
(222), said micro wireless base station (202) generating a second forward link data
signal (230) and communicating with a second subscriber station (236), the method
comprising the steps of:
a. receiving, at said micro wireless base station (202), said first forward link data
signal (224, 226);
b. combining, at said micro wireless base station (202), said received first forward
link data signal (224, 226) with said second forward link data signal (230) to form
a combined forward link data signal (230); and
c. transmitting, from said micro wireless base station (202), said combined forward
link data signal, wherein the first subscriber station (222) is able to receive and
diversity combine the macro base station forward link data from the combined forward
link data signal (230) transmitted by the micro base station (202).
2. The method of claim 1 further comprising the step of delaying said received first
forward link data signal (224, 226) for a delay period.
3. The method of claim 2 further comprising the step of switching between said step of
receiving said first forward link data signal (224, 226) and transmitting said combined
forward link data signal (230) at a switching period.
4. The method of claim 3 wherein said switching step of switching is performed at a 50%
duty cycle.
5. The method of claim 3 wherein said delay period is greater than one PN spreading chip
in duration.
6. The method of claim 3 wherein said step of switching occurs only at Walsh function
boundaries.
7. The method of claim 3 wherein said switching period is of random duration.
8. The method of claim 3 further comprising the steps of:
a. measuring a power level of said delayed received first forward link data signal;
and
b. adjusting said power level of said delayed received first forward link data signal
in response to said measuring step.
9. The method of claim 3 further comprising the steps of:
a. transmitting power control commands to said second subscriber' station (236), each
of said power control commands indicating an increase or decrease in transmit power;
and
b. terminating communication with said second subscriber station (236) if said micro
base station (202) transmits a predetermined number of consecutive power control commands
indicating an increase in transmit power.
10. The method of claim 3 further comprising the steps of:
a. transmitting power control commands to said second subscriber station (236), each
of said power control commands indicating an increase or decrease in transmit power;
and
b. executing a handoff of said second subscriber station (236) to said macro base
station (204) if said micro base station (202)transmits a predetermined number of
consecutive power control commands indicating an increase in transmit power.
11. The method of claim 3 further comprising the step of said second subscriber station
(236) limiting transmit power to a predetermined maximum level when communicating
with said micro base station (202), said predetermined maximum level being less than
a conventional maximum level used when communicating with said macro base station
(204).
12. The method of claim 11 further comprising the step of said micro base station (202)
commanding said second subscriber station (236) to limit transmit power to said predetermined
maximum level.
13. The method of claim 11 further comprising the step of said second subscriber station
(236) transmitting a signaling message, indicating that said second subscriber station
(236) is transmitting at said predetermined maximum level, to said micro base station
(202).
14. The method of claim 3 further comprising the steps of:
a. demodulating, in said micro base station (202), said received first forward link
data signal; and
b. determining a time reference from said demodulated received first forward link
data signal.
15. The method of claim 3 further comprising the steps of:
a. demodulating, in said micro base station (202), said received first forward link
data signal; and
b. determining a frequency reference from said demodulated received first forward
link data signal.
16. A system for providing personal base station operations within the coverage area of
a cellular wireless communication system, the system comprising:
a. a macro wireless base station (204) for generating and transmitting a first forward
link data signal (224, 226) on a predetermined frequency band; and
b. a micro wireless base station in the same cell of a cellular communication system
(202) for generating a second forward link data signal (230), said micro wireless
base station comprising:
1) a receiver (324) for receiving said first forward link data signal (224, 226) ;
2) a combiner (214) for combining said received first forward link data signal with
said second forward link data signal to form a combined forward link data signal;
and
3) a transmitter (314) for transmitting said combined forward link data signal on
said predetermined frequency band, wherein a first subscriber station (222), which
is in communication with the macro station (204), is able to receive and diversity
combine the macro base station forward link data from the combined forward link data
signal (230) transmitted by the micro base station (202).
17. The system of claim 16 further comprising a delay element (304) for delaying said
received first forward link data signal for a delay period.
18. The system of claim 17 further comprising switching means (208) for switching between
said receiver (324) and said transmitter (314) at a switching period.
19. The system of claim 18 wherein said switching means (208) switches between said receiver
(324) and said transmitter (314) at a 50 percent duty cycle.
20. The system of claim 18 wherein said delay period is greater than one PN spreading
chip in duration.
21. The system of claim 18 wherein said switching means (208) switches between said receiver
(324) and said transmitter (314) only at Walsh function boundaries.
22. The system of claim 18 wherein said switching period is of random duration.
23. The system of claim 18 further comprising:
a. a power measurer (310) for measuring a power level of said received first forward
link data signal; and
b. a gain adjuster (312) for adjusting said power level of said received first forward
link level measurement.
24. The system of claim 18 further comprising a power control command generator (332)
for generating power control commands, each of said power control commands indicating
an increase or decrease transmit power, and wherein said micro base station (202)
terminates communication with said second subscriber station (236) if said micro base
station (202) transmits K power control commands indicating an increase in transmit
power within a group of N power control commands, where K is a predetermined number
less than N.
25. The system of claim 18 further comprising a power control command generator (332)
for generating power control commands, each of said power control commands indicating
an increase or decrease transmit power, and wherein said micro base station (202)
executes a handoff of said second subscriber station (236) to said macro base station
(204) if said micro base station (202) transmits a predetermined number of consecutive
power control commands indicating an increase in transmit power.
26. The system of claim 18 wherein said second subscriber station (236) limits transmit
power to a predetermined maximum level when communicating with said micro base station
(202), said predetermined maximum level being less than a conventional maximum level
used when communicating with said macro base station (204).
27. The system of claim 26 wherein said micro base station (202) commands said second
subscriber station (236) to limit transmit power to said predetermined maximum level.
28. The system of claim 26 wherein said second subscriber station (236) transmits a signaling
message, indicating that said second subscriber station (236) is transmitting at said
predetermined maximum level, to said micro base station (202).
29. The system of claim 18 further comprising:
a. a demodulator (326) for demodulating said received first forward link data signal;
and
b. time reference determining means (330) for determining a time reference from said
demodulated received first forward link data signal.
30. The system of claim 18 further comprising:
a. a demodulator (326) for demodulating said received data signal; and
b. frequency reference determining means for frequency reference from said demodulated
received link data signal.
31. The system of claim 18 wherein said micro base station (202) commands said second
subscriber station (236) to have a threshold which is used to detect when the subscriber
station's output power exceeds this threshold.
32. The system of claim 31 wherein said second subscriber station (236) transmits a signaling
message, indicating that said second subscriber station (236) is transmitting at said
predetermined level, to said micro base station (202).
1. Ein Verfahren zum Betreiben einer Makro-Drahtlos-Basisstation (204) auf demselben
Frequenzband wie eine Mikro-Drahtlos-Basisstation (202) in derselben Zelle eines zellularen
Kommunikationssystems, wobei die Makro-Drahtlos-Basisstation (204) ein erstes Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignal
(224, 226) generiert und sendet und mit einer ersten Teilnehmerstation (222) kommuniziert,
wobei die Mikro-Drahtlos-Basisstation (202) ein zweites Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignal
(230) generiert und mit einer zweiten Teilnehmerstation (236) kommuniziert, wobei
das Verfahren folgende Schritte aufweist:
a) Empfangen, an der Mikro-Drahtlos-Basisstation (202), eines ersten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignals
(224, 226);
b) Kombinieren an der Mikro-Drahtlos-Basistation (202) des empfangenen ersten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignals
(224, 226) mit dem zweiten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignal (230), um ein kombiniertes
Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignal (230) zu bilden; und
c) Senden von der Mikro-Drahtlos-Basisstation (202) des kombinierten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignals,
wobei die erste Teilnehmerstation (222) in der Lage ist, die Makro-Basisstations-Vorwärtsverbindungsdaten
von dem kombinierten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignal (230), das von der Mikro-Basisstation
(202) gesendet wird, zu empfangen und diversity- bzw. vielseitigkeitszukombinieren.
2. Verfahren nach Anspruch 1, das weiterhin den Schritt des Verzögerns des empfangenen
ersten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignals (224, 226) um eine Verzögerungsperiode aufweist.
3. Verfahren nach Anspruch 2, das weiterhin den Schritt des Schaltens zwischen dem Schritt
des Empfangens des ersten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignals (224, 226) und dem Senden
des kombinierten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignals (230) aufweist, und zwar bei einer
Schaltperiode.
4. Verfahren nach Anspruch 3, wobei der Schaltschritt des Schaltens mit einem 50%-Arbeitszyklus
ausgeführt wird.
5. Verfahren nach Anspruch 3, wobei die Verzögerungsperiode größer ist als ein PN-Spreizchip
von der Dauer her.
6. Verfahren nach Anspruch 3, wobei der Schritt des Schaltens nur bei Walsh-Funktionsgrenzen
auftritt.
7. Verfahren nach Anspruch 3, wobei die Schaltperiode eine Zufallsdauer besitzt.
8. Verfahren nach Anspruch 3, das weiterhin folgende Schritte aufweist:
a) Messen eines Leistungspegels des verzögerten empfangenen ersten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignals;
und
b) Anpassen des Leistungspegels des verzögerten empfangenen ersten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignals
ansprechend auf den Messschritt.
9. Verfahren nach Anspruch 3, das weiterhin folgende Schritte aufweist:
a) Senden von Leistungssteuerbefehlen zu der zweiten Teilnehmerstation (236), wobei
jeder der Leistungssteuerbefehle einen Anstieg oder ein Sinken in der Sendeleistung
anzeigt; und
b) Beenden von Kommunikation mit der zweiten Teilnehmerstation (236), wenn die Mikro-Basisstation
(202) eine vorbestimmte Anzahl von aufeinander folgenden Leistungssteuerbefehlen sendet,
die einen Anstieg in der Sendeleistung anzeigen.
10. Verfahren nach Anspruch 3, das weiterhin folgende Schritte aufweist:
a) Senden von Leistungssteuerbefehlen zu der zweiten Teilnehmerstation (236), wobei
jeder der Leistungssteuerbefehle einen Anstieg oder ein Sinken der Sendeleistung anzeigt;
und
b) Ausführen einer Übergabe bzw. Handoff der zweiten Teilnehmerstation (236) zu der
Makro-Basisstation (204), wenn die Mikro-Basisstation (202) eine vorbestimmte Anzahl
von aufeinander folgenden Leistungssteuerungsbefehlen sendet, die einen Anstieg in
der Sendeleistung anzeigen.
11. Verfahren nach Anspruch 3, das weiterhin den Schritt aufweist, dass die zweite Teilnehmerstation
(236) die Sendeleistung auf einen vorbestimmten Maximalpegel begrenzt, wenn sie mit
der Mikro-Basisstation (202) kommuniziert, wobei der vorbestimmte Maximalpegel kleiner
ist als ein herkömmlicher Maximalpegel, der verwendet wird, wenn mit der Makro-Basisstation
(204) kommuniziert wird.
12. Verfahren nach Anspruch 11, das weiterhin den Schritt aufweist, dass die Mikro-Basisstation
(202) der der zweiten Teilnehmerstation (236) befiehlt, die Sendeleistung auf den
vorbestimmten Maximalpegel zu begrenzen.
13. Verfahren nach Anspruch 11, das weiterhin den Schritt aufweist, dass die zweite Teilnehmerstation
(236) eine Signalisierungsnachricht sendet, die anzeigt, dass die zweite Teilnehmerstation
(236) mit dem vorbestimmten maximalen Pegel zu der Mikro-Basisstation (202) sendet.
14. Verfahren nach Anspruch 3, das weiterhin folgende Schritte aufweist:
a) Demodulieren in der Mikro-Basisstation (202) des empfangenen ersten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignals;
und
b) Bestimmen einer Zeitreferenz von dem demodulierten empfangen ersten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignal.
15. Verfahren nach Anspruch 3, das weiterhin folgende Schritte aufweist:
a) Demodulieren in der Mikro-Basisstation (202) des empfangenen ersten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignals;
und
b) Bestimmen einer Frequenzreferenz von dem demodulierten empfangenen ersten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignal.
16. Ein System zum Vorsehen von persönlichen Basisstationsoperationen innerhalb des Abdeckungsbereichs
eines zellularen Drahtlos-Kommunikationssystems, wobei das System Folgendes aufweist:
a) eine Makro-Drahtlos-Basisstation (204) zum Generieren und Senden eines ersten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignals
(224, 226) auf einem vorbestimmten Frequenzband; und
b) eine Mikro-Drahtlos-Basisstation in derselben Zelle eines zellularen Kommunikationssystems
(202) zum Generieren eines zweiten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignals (230), wobei die
Mikro-Drahtlos-Basisstation Folgendes aufweist:
1) einen Empfänger (324) zum Empfangen des ersten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignals
(224, 226);
2) einen Kombinierer (214) zum Kombinieren des empfangenen ersten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignals
mit dem zweiten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignal, um ein kombiniertes Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignal
zu bilden; und
3) einen Sender (314) zum Senden des kombinierten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignals
auf dem vorbestimmten Frequenzband, wobei eine erste Teilnehmerstation (222), die
sich in Kommunikation mit der Makro-Station (204) befindet, in der Lage ist, die Makro-Basisstations-Vorwärtsverbindungsdaten
von dem kombinierten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignal (230), gesendet durch die Mikro-Basisstation
(202), zu empfangen und diversity- bzw. vielseitigskeitzukombinieren.
17. System nach Anspruch 16, das weiterhin ein Verzögerungselement (304) aufweist zum
Verzögern des empfangenen ersten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignals um eine Verzögerungsperiode.
18. System nach Anspruch 17, das weiter Schaltmittel (208) zum Schalten zwischen dem Empfänger
(324) und dem Sender (314) aufweist, und zwar bei einer Schaltperiode bzw. mit einer
Schaltperiode.
19. System nach Anspruch 18, wobei die Schaltmittel (208) zwischen dem Empfänger (324)
und dem Sender (314) mit einem 50%-Arbeits- bzw. Lastzyklus umschalten.
20. System nach Anspruch 18, wobei die Verzögerungsperiode größer ist als ein PN-Spreizchip
von der Dauer her.
21. System nach Anspruch 18, wobei die Schaltmittel (208) zwischen dem Empfänger (324)
und dem Sender (314) schalten, und zwar nur an Walsh-Funktionsgrenzen.
22. System nach Anspruch 18, wobei die Schaltperiode eine zufällige Dauer besitzt.
23. System nach Anspruch 18, das weiterhin Folgendes aufweist:
a) ein Leistungsmesselement (310) zum Messen eines Leistungspegels des empfangenen
ersten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignals; und
b) ein Verstärkungsanpasselement (312) zum Anpassen des Leistungspegels der empfangenen
ersten Vorwärtsverbindungspegelmessung.
24. System nach Anspruch 18, das weiterhin einen Leistungsteuerbefehlsgenerator (332)
aufweist zum Generieren von Leistungssteuerbefehlen, wobei jeder der Leistungssteuerbefehle
einen Anstieg oder ein Absinken der Sendeleistung anzeigt, und wobei die Mikro-Basisstation
(202) Kommunikationen mit der zweiten Teilnehmerstation (236) beendet, wenn die Mikro-Basisstation
(202) K Leistungssteuerbefehle sendet, die einen Anstieg in der Sendeleistung innerhalb
einer Gruppe von N Leistungssteuerbefehlen anzeigt, wobei K eine vorbestimmte Anzahl
von weniger als N ist.
25. System nach Anspruch 18, das weiterhin einen Leistungssteuerungsbefehlsgenerator (332)
aufweist zum Generieren von Leistungssteuerbefehlen, wobei jeder der Leistungssteuerbefehle
einen Anstieg oder ein Absinken der Sendeleistung anzeigt, und wobei die Mikro-Basisstation
(202) eine Übergabe der zweiten Teilnehmerstation (236) zu der Makro-Basisstation
(204) ausführt, wenn die Mikro-Basisstation (202) eine vorbestimmte Anzahl von aufeinander
folgenden Leistungssteuerbefehlen, anzeigend für einen Anstieg in der Sendeleistung,
sendet.
26. System nach Anspruch 18, wobei die zweite Teilnehmerstation (236) die Sendeleistung
auf einen vorbestimmten Maximal-Pegel beschränkt, wenn sie mit der Mikro-Basisstation
(202) kommuniziert, wobei der vorbestimmte Maximalpegel weniger als ein herkömmlicher
Maximalpegel ist, der verwendet wird, wenn mit der Makro-Basisstation (204) kommuniziert
wird.
27. System nach Anspruch 26, wobei die Mikro-Basisstation (202) der zweiten Teilnehmerstation
(236) befiehlt, die Sendeleistung auf den vorbestimmten Maximalpegel zu begrenzen.
28. System nach Anspruch 26, wobei die zweite Teilnehmerstation (236) eine Signalisierungsnachricht
sendet, anzeigend dafür, dass die zweite Teilnehmerstation (236) mit dem vorbestimmten
Maximalpegel sendet, und zwar an die Mikro-Basisstation (202).
29. System nach Anspruch 18, das weiterhin Folgendes aufweist:
a) einen Demodulator (326) zum Demodulieren des empfangenen ersten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignals;
und
b) Zeitreferenzbestimmungsmittel (330) zum Bestimmen einer Zeitreferenz von dem demodulierten,
empfangenen, ersten Vorwärtsverbindungsdatensignal.
30. System nach Anspruch 18, das weiterhin Folgendes aufweist:
a) einen Demodulator (326) zum Demodulieren des empfangenen Datensignals; und
b) Frequenzreferenzbestimmungsmittel als Frequenzreferenz von dem demodulierten empfangenen
Verbindungsdatensignal.
31. System nach Anspruch 18, wobei die Mikro-Basisstation (202) der zweiten Teilnehmerstation
(236) befiehlt, eine Schwelle zu besitzen, die verwendet wird zum Detektieren, wann
die Ausgabeleistung der Teilnehmerstation diese Schwelle überschreitet.
32. System nach Anspruch 31, wobei die zweite Teilnehmerstation (236) eine Signalisierungsnachricht
sendet, die anzeigt, dass die zweite Teilnehmerstation (236) mit einem vorbestimmten
Pegel sendet, und zwar an die Mikro-Basisstation (202).
1. Procédé d'actionnement d'une macro-station de base sans fil (204) sur la même bande
de fréquence qu'une micro-station de base sans fil (202) dans la même cellule d'un
système de communication cellulaire, la macro-station de base sans fil (204) produisant
et émettant un premier signal de données en liaison directe (224, 226) et communiquant
avec un premier poste d'abonné (222), la micro-station de base sans fil (202) produisant
un second signal de données en liaison directe (230) et communiquant avec un second
poste d'abonné (236), ce procédé comprenant les étapes suivantes :
a. recevoir au niveau de la micro-station de base sans fil (202) le premier signal
de données en liaison directe (224, 226) ;
b. combiner au niveau du micro-station de base sans fil (202) le premier signal de
données en liaison directe reçu (224, 226) avec le second signal de données en liaison
directe (230) pour former un signal de données en liaison directe combiné (230) ;
c. émettre à partir de la micro-station de base sans fil (202) le signal de données
en liaison directe combiné, le premier poste d'abonné (222) pouvant recevoir et combiner
en diversité les données en liaison directe de la macro-station de base, à partir
du signal de données en liaison directe (230) combiné émis par la micro-station de
base (202).
2. Procédé selon la revendication 1, comprenant en outre l'étape consistant à retarder
le premier signal de données en liaison directe (224, 226) pendant une durée de retard.
3. Procédé selon la revendication 2, comprenant en outre l'étape de commutation entre
l'étape de réception du premier signal de données en liaison directe (224, 226) et
l'émission du signal de données en liaison directe combiné (230) lors d'une durée
de commutation.
4. Procédé selon la revendication 3, dans lequel l'étape de commutation est réalisée
à un rapport cyclique de 50 %.
5. Procédé selon la revendication 3, dans lequel la durée de retard est supérieure à
la durée d'un élément de code d'étalement PN.
6. Procédé selon la revendication 3, dans lequel l'étape de commutation survient seulement
au niveau de limites de fonctions de Walsh.
7. Procédé selon la revendication 3, dans lequel la durée de commutation est une durée
aléatoire.
8. Procédé selon la revendication 3, comprenant en outre les étapes suivantes :
a. mesurer le niveau de puissance du premier signal de données en liaison directe
reçu et retardé ; et
b. régler le niveau de puissance du premier signal de données en liaison directe reçu
et retardé en réponse à l'étape de mesure.
9. Procédé selon la revendication 3, comprenant en outre les étapes suivantes :
a. émettre des ordres de commande de puissance vers le second poste d'abonné (236),
chacun des ordres de commande de puissance indiquant une augmentation ou une diminution
de puissance d'émission ; et
b. interrompre la communication avec le second poste d'abonné (236) si la micro-station
de base (202) émet un nombre prédéterminé d'ordres de commande de puissance successifs
indiquant une augmentation de puissance d'émission.
10. Procédé selon la revendication 3, comprenant en outre les étapes suivantes :
a. émettre des ordres de commande de puissance vers le second poste d'abonné (236),
chacun des ordres de commande de puissance indiquant une augmentation ou une diminution
de puissance d'émission ; et
b. exécuter un transfert du second poste d'abonné (236) à la macro-station de base
(204) si la micro-station de base (202) émet un nombre prédéterminé d'ordres de commande
de puissance successifs indiquant une augmentation de puissance d'émission.
11. Procédé selon la revendication 3, comprenant l'étape selon laquelle le second poste
d'abonné (236) limite la puissance d'émission à un niveau maximal prédéterminé quand
il communique avec la micro-station de base (202), le niveau maximum prédéterminé
étant inférieur à un niveau maximum classique utilisé quand on communique avec la
macro-station de base (204).
12. Procédé selon la revendication 11, comprenant en outre l'étape selon laquelle la micro-station
de base (202) commande le second poste d'abonné (236) pour limiter la puissance d'émission
au niveau maximum prédéterminé.
13. Procédé selon la revendication 11, comprenant en outre l'étape selon laquelle le second
poste.d'abonné (236) émet un message de signalisation, indiquant que le second poste
d'abonné (236) émet au niveau maximum prédéterminé vers la micro-station de base (202).
14. Procédé selon la revendication 3, comprenant en outre les étapes suivantes :
a. démoduler dans la micro-station de base (202) le premier signal de données en liaison
directe reçu ; et
b. déterminer une référence temporelle à partir du premier signal de données en liaison
directe reçu et démodulé.
15. Procédé selon la revendication 3, comprenant les étapes suivantes :
a. démoduler dans la micro-station de base (202) le premier signal de données en liaison
directe reçu ; et
b. déterminer une fréquence de référence à partir du premier signal de données en
liaison directe reçu et démodulé.
16. Système pour fournir des actions personnelles à une station de base dans la zone de
couverture d'un système de communication cellulaire sans fil, le système comprenant
:
a. une macro-station de base sans fil (204) pour produire et émettre un premier signal
de données en liaison directe (224, 226) sur une bande de fréquence prédéterminée
; et
b. une micro-station de base sans fil dans la même cellule d'un système de communication
cellulaire (202) pour produire un second signal de données en liaison directe (230),
la micro-station de base sans fil comprenant :
1) un récepteur (324) pour recevoir le signal de données en liaison directe (224,
226) ;
2) un combinateur (214) pour combiner le premier signal de données en liaison directe
reçu avec le second signal de données en liaison directe pour former un signal de
données en liaison directe combiné ; et
3) un émetteur (314) pour émettre le signal de données en liaison directe combiné
sur la bande de fréquence prédéterminée, dans lequel un premier poste d'abonné (222),
qui est en communication avec la macro-station (204) est apte à recevoir et à combiner
en diversité les données en liaison directe de la macro-station de base à partir du
signal de données en liaison directe combiné (230) émis par la micro-station de base
(202).
17. Système selon la revendication 16, comprenant en outre un élément de retard (304)
pour retarder le premier signal de données en liaison directe pendant une durée de
retard.
18. Système selon la revendication 17, comprenant en outre des moyens de commutation (208)
pour commuter entre le récepteur (324) et l'émetteur (314) pendant une durée de commutation.
19. Système selon la revendication 18, dans lequel les moyens de commutation (208) commutent
entre le récepteur (324) et l'émetteur (314) à un rapport cyclique de 50 %.
20. Système selon la revendication 18, dans lequel la durée de retard est supérieure à
la durée d'un élément de code d'étalement PN.
21. Système selon la revendication 18, dans lequel les moyens de commutation (208) commutent
entre le récepteur (324) et l'émetteur (314) seulement au niveau de limites de fonctions
de Walsh.
22. Système selon la revendication 18, dans lequel la période de commutation est une durée
aléatoire.
23. Système selon la revendication 18, comprenant en outre :
a. un moyen de mesure de puissance (310) pour mesurer le niveau de puissance du premier
signal de données en liaison directe reçu ; et
b. un moyen de réglage de gain (312) pour régler le niveau de puissance de la première
mesure de niveau en liaison directe reçue.
24. Système selon la revendication 18, comprenant en outre un générateur d'ordres de commande
de puissance (332) pour produire des ordres de commande de puissance, chacun des ordres
de commande de puissance indiquant une augmentation ou une diminution de puissance
d'émission, et dans lequel la micro-station de base (202) interrompt la communication
avec le second poste d'abonné (236) si la micro-station de base (202) émet K ordres
de commande de puissance indiquant une augmentation de puissance d'émission à l'intérieur
d'un groupe de N ordres de commande de puissance, K étant un nombre prédéterminé inférieur
à N.
25. Système selon la revendication 18, comprenant en outre un générateur d'ordres de commande
de puissance (332) pour produire des ordres de commande de puissance, chacun des ordres
de commande de puissance indiquant une augmentation ou une diminution de puissance
d'émission, et dans lequel la micro-station de base (202) exécute un transfert du
second poste d'abonné (236) à la macro-station de base (204) si la micro-station de
base (202) émet un nombre prédéterminé d'ordres de commande de puissance successifs
indiquant une augmentation de puissance d'émission.
26. Système selon la revendication 18, dans lequel le second poste d'abonné (236) limite
la puissance d'émission à un niveau maximum prédéterminé quand il communique avec
la micro-station de base (202), le niveau maximum prédéterminé étant inférieur à un
niveau maximum classique utilisé quand on communique avec la macro-station de base
(204).
27. Système selon la revendication 26, dans lequel la micro-station de base (202) commande
le second poste d'abonné (236) pour limiter la puissance d'émission au niveau maximum
prédéterminé.
28. Système selon la revendication 26, dans lequel le second poste d'abonné (236) émet
un message de signalisation indiquant que le second poste d'abonné (236) est en train
d'émettre au niveau maximum prédéterminé vers la micro-station de base (202).
29. Système selon la revendication 18, comprenant en outre :
a. un démodulateur (326) pour démoduler le premier signal de données en liaison directe
; et
b. un moyen de détermination de référence temporelle (330) pour déterminer une référence
temporelle pour le premier signal de données en liaison directe reçu et démodulé.
30. Système selon la revendication 18, comprenant en outre :
a. un démodulateur (326) pour démoduler le signal de données reçu ; et
b. un moyen de détermination de référence de fréquence pour servir de référence de
fréquence à partir du signal de données en liaison directe reçu et démodulé.
31. Système selon la revendication 18, dans lequel la micro-station de base (202) commande
le second poste d'abonné (236) pour avoir un seuil qui est utilisé pour détecter quand
la puissance de sortie du poste d'abonné (222) dépasse ce seuil.
32. Système selon la revendication 31, dans lequel le second poste d'abonné (236) émet
un message de signalisation indiquant que le second poste d'abonné (236) est en train
d'émettre au niveau prédéterminé vers la micro-station de base (202).